Browse Items (7 items total)

Berry encloses a letter from Mr. Chambers and asks Wingo to follow up with him, as "it seems that all of our friends are like flowers." She suggests that Wingo might borrow a typewriter for the girls who won English pins and tells her that someone has sent his opinions of the schools to Emily Vanderbilt Hammond and John D. Rockefeller in which he criticizes the schools as extravagant and makes other criticisms.

Alice Wingo writes to Martha Berry updating her on what she's doing and suggests a kindergarten program at The Berry Schools. She says that she doesn't think it will require more staff. She also says that she met a Berry alum at church playing a saxophone and helping in the choir.

Martha Berry writes to Miss Wingo in the hopes she will come to teach at Berry. The school can offer her ten to eleven months' work as the high school English teacher but it will not be like what she previously did at a college.